The changes are fairly minimal at first glance, but the browser now uses square edges on tabs rather than rounded ones and ditches the ‘hamburger’ menu for three dots instead. The buttons animate when clicked using small explosions from under your mouse.

It also redesigns the infobars, security icon and bookmark buttons.

A design specification from Google Code also shows a preview of the new all-black incognito mode that’s part of the redesign but may change as it’s implemented.

A number of smaller changes are littered around the browser, such as improved scrolling bars, tweaked buttons, new icons and more.

There’s a number of other pages individually being redesigned by the Chrome team, including Downloads, Extensions, Settings and History. These have already made their way into the browser on Windows and Chrome OS, hidden behind individual flags.

Many of these changes are still at an early implementation phase, such as the Settings page, so aren’t fully working yet.

Material Design changes to the top bar work for both PC and Chrome OS, but enabling them on OS X does nothing right now. That said, almost every browser element has an issue open to upgrade its design, many of which have been active as of late 2015.

It’s good to see Google finally bringing Material Design to the desktop browser, almost two years on from it first debuting the design language.

If you want to try some of the tweaks in your browser, many of these options are available for testing right now — head over to this post to find out all the options you can enable while you wait.